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Regina Jeffers

REGI n A j EFFERS

Writing passionately comes easily to Regina Jeffers. A master teacher, for thirty-nine years, she passionately taught thousands of students English in the public schools of West Virginia, Ohio, and North Carolina. Yet, “teacher” does not define her as a person. Ask any of her students or her family, and they will tell you Regina is passionate about so many things: her son, children in need, truth, responsibility, the value of a good education, words, music, dance, the theatre, pro football, classic movies, the BBC, track and field, books, books, and more books. Holding multiple degrees, Jeffers often serves as a Language Arts or Media Literacy consultant to surrounding school districts and has served on several state and national educational commissions.

Branching out into Regency and contemporary romance, Jeffers insists, “Every woman dreams of her one great love, the man who inspires an emotional response with just a glance across a crowded room. A romance novel must by definition exist purely for the advancement of the hero’s love affair with the heroine; yet, the reader must want the hero to win the woman’s love. To be believable, there must be a connection beyond the sexual appeal; there must be some conflict, which is character-driven. The characters must have believable reasons to be drawn together, as well as to be frustrated by their dreams.” This is the type of literature Jeffers writes–something truly beautiful and haunting.

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Uncaged: Welcome to Uncaged! You’ve written a lot of historical mysteries with Pride and Prejudice as the inspiration for many. Your latest is The Mysterious Death of Mr. Darcy. What gave you the inspiration (and the courage) to take such a creative liberty with this beloved story and the different takes on this story, both fantasy and not?

Back in 2008, I was complaining to my Advanced Placement Language class that a book, one of what we now call “Jane Austen Fan Fiction” or “JAFF,” used incidents that were historically inaccurate. I told my students I threw the book across the room, which they realized meant I saw the book as a true travesty, for the walls of my classroom had multiple bookshelves full of all types of reading material. One student said, “If you know how to do it, do it yourself.” I took the challenge and rewrote Austen’s Pride and Prejudice from Mr. Darcy’s point of view. I self published the book, allowed one of my students to draw the cover for she wished to go to art school and could add “published artist” to her resume, and pretty much forgot about it. One day, my son called to tell me the book was #8 on the Amazon sales list. A few days later, I received an offer from Ulysses Press to publish the book traditionally. At the time, several large names in the publishing business had caught onto Austen’s popularity and were seeking writers of JAFF. I sold Darcy’s Passions to Ulysses. They asked for more, and I spent several years with them, publishing 10 books in all. It was a great experience. I have published 24 (with another arriving the first week of January 2021) Austen-inspired stories. Unlike some of those who write JAFF, I pride myself on my research, keeping the history accurate, while staying very close to canon. In the JAFF format, the author, generally, takes the original story and changes one event sending Austen’s characters down a different path, but having them end up in the same place at the end.

Uncaged: You also write historical Regency and contemporary romance. What are you working on

I have a new book arriving November 30. It is entitled I Shot the Sheriff (I dare you not to hum “but I did not shoot the deputy”), and it is the second book in the Tragic Characters in Classic Lit Series. Eight Regency-based writers have taken “tragic characters” and moved them into the Regency era and presented the character a Happily Ever After. My story deals with the notorious Sheriff of Nottingham, who I once thought to despise, but now adore. Other characters being addressed by the group are Frankenstein, Madame Bovary, Catherine and Heathcliff from Wuthering Heights, Colonel Fitzwilliam from Pride and Prejudice, Macbeth, Orpheus and Eurydice, and Captain Miles Standish of the Mayflower fame and Longfellow’s poem. After that, I have a new JAFF story, The Mistress of Rosing Park arriving in early January 2021, and The Phantom of Pemberley: A Pride and Prejudice Mystery in March 2021. I have 23 Regency stories (including one 8-book series and a separate trilogy) and 3 contemporary tales to my credit.

Uncaged: How has the coronavirus pandemic changed your lifestyle? Have you had to change any book promotion plans because of it?

As to being alone, the COVID pandemic has not changed much for my daily writing and researching. However, I cannot say I have had “more” time for my writing. I seem to find just as many distractions now as I did before the pandemic. I tend to be a very goal-oriented style writer. I work well with deadlines. The pandemic has, however, changed my traveling to book festivals, bookstores, etc., to meet fans. I desperately miss that connection. Some of my most faithful followers, those who trusted me to write both JAFF and Regencies, are good to send me the occasional word of encouragement. Those

Uncaged: Past or present, which authors would you love to sit and have lunch with and why?

Naturally, people would assume I would choose Jane Austen, and I would, but when asked a similar question I have always said I would like to sit down with Jane Austen, but add Ernest Hemingway to the table, along with new favs, Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, and Frances Grose. I think Austen’s quick wit and my sharp observations could handle the “gentlemen.” Hemingway has always fascinated me. He had more than one close encounter with death, was a bit paranoid, and definitely hyperactive. He wrote: “Every man’s life ends the same way. It is only the details of how he lived and how he died that distinguish one man from another.” As to Longfellow, he and I are both descendants of John Alden of Plymouth Colony fame. Longfellow is descended from Alden’s first daughter Elizabeth. I am from Alden’s last daughter Rebecca. I have used Longfellow’s “The Courtship of Miles Standish” as the basis of my second novel in the Tragic Characters in Classic

Lit Series. “Captain Stanwick’s Bride” will arrive in February 2021. Francis Grose, author of 1811 Dictionary of Vulgar Tongue, is my cousin six times removed. Grose’s father was a jeweler to King George. Would not all these men have interesting tales to tell? I would love to learn more of my relatives and also discover if my fascination with both Austen and Hemingway is worthy of my admiration.

Uncaged: Have any of your characters ever done something that you didn’t intend when you began?

I am a “pantser,” meaning I “write by the seat of my pants.” That does not mean that I do not have a plan for the book before I begin writing. I do. I call my method the “umbrella model.” I know how the story will begin, recognize the climax, and have the ending planned. I have a few ideas, like the spokes of an umbrella, that lead me to the next “spoke” or enticing action; yet, often, I plan one event and the character says, “I would not do that. Think of something different.” It is rare I do not bend to his/her will.

Uncaged: What are some things you like to do to relax when you aren’t writing or working?

I work in my flower beds when I am not writing, and I volunteer in the children’s programs with the Department of Health and Human Services in my county. That has not changed since COVID arrived. I find pulling weeds quite therapeutic, and I have a soft spot in my heart when it comes

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to children in need. I also enjoy going to cultural programs, traveling Broadway plays, concerts, etc. Alas, those activities have taken a major hit since the pandemic.

Uncaged: What does success as an author look like to you?

Like most authors, I wish one of my stories was picked up by a movie director/producer. I would love to be a best-selling author. Sell more books, etc. However, I would continue to write even if none of those things happen. I have always had a creative streak that required attention. I was a professional dancer (Broadway) and a theatre director and actor for community productions. Writing is my new normal.

Uncaged: Do you prefer ebooks, audiobooks or physical books? Are you reading anything now?

I prefer physical books, but I do not rule out an eBook. Many of the stories I read are on my eReader. I am not much of one for audiobooks. I have quite a few, but I am always on the move. Audiobooks take too much time when I could be doing something else.

I am currently reading A Well Behaved Woman: A Novel of the Vanderbilts by Therese Anne Fowler. Living in North Carolina, I often visit the Biltmore estate. Alva Smith and William Vanderbilt’s marriage of convenience is anything but that.

Uncaged: What would you like to say to fans, and where can they follow you?

I have made friends with many of my fans. Kim is one of my most loyal friends, and we met at a book signing. Marina rode her motorcycle 320 miles round trip to meet me in person. I send out Christmas cards to many—those for whom I have a physical mailing address and eCards to many where I have only an email address. My fans lift me up when I am having a bad day. I am blessed to name them as part of this journey.

Enjoy an excerpt from The Mysterious Death of Mr. Darcy

The Mysterious Death of Mr. Darcy Regina Jeffers Historical Mystery

Fitzwilliam Darcy is devastated. The joy of his recent wedding has been cut short by the news of the sudden death of his father’s beloved cousin, Samuel Darcy. Elizabeth and Darcy travel to Dorset, a popular Regency resort area, to pay their respects to the well-traveled and eccentric Samuel. But this is no summer holiday. Danger bubbles beneath Dorset’s peaceful surface as strange and foreboding events begin to occur. Several of Samuel’s ancient treasures go missing, and then his body itself disappears. As Darcy and Elizabeth investigate this mystery and unravel its tangled ties to the haunting legends of Dark Dorset, the legendary couple’s love is put to the test when sinister forces strike close to home. Some secrets should remain secrets, but Darcy will do all he can to find answers—even if it means meeting his own end in the damp depths of a newly dug grave. With malicious villains, dramatic revelations and heroic gestures, The Mysterious Death of Mr. Darcy will keep Austen fans and mystery readers turning the pages right up until its dramatic conclusion.

Excerpt

She had left the pages resting on the small desk to stand and stare out the window. Heavily, she leaned against the frame. Elizabeth’s cheek rested against the cool pane. “Protect him, God,” she whispered to the night sky. She said no more. God

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would know her sentiments regarding the probability of Darcy’s demise. There she had stood from three to five of the clock, staring out the window, gazing at the road: She had kept an anxious vigil awaiting Darcy’s return, but saw nothing. As dawn’s fingers broke through the blackness, her anxiety increased. “Where is he?” she whispered as she searched the outline of trees and shrubbery on the horizon. Elizabeth reasoned, “If he were injured, Mr. Holbrook would have brought word.” For a brief moment, she felt the satisfaction of Darcy’s continued health, but the dread Elizabeth had forcibly placed aside returned. “But if Fitzwilliam were dead ...” She stared intently at the narrow path leading to the main road, the same road her husband would ride upon his return. Hot tears pricked her eyes, and Elizabeth could not catch her breath. “Would they not inform me?” she sobbed. “Would they not permit me to comfort my husband in his last hours? His last minutes?” A figure appeared at the far end of the path, and for the pause of three heartbeats, hope swelled in Elizabeth’s chest. She clung to the sash and watched as the figure moved closer. Her heart lurched. “Not Darcy,” she whispered. The figure belonged to a woman. “Too spry for Mrs. Jacobs,” she speculated. Whoever it was, Woodvine was the woman’s destination. Elizabeth turned from the window. She quickly gathered Samuel’s journals and shoved them from view between the mattresses of her bed. She would hide them more carefully upon her return. Elizabeth shed the satin robe she had worn over a simple chocolate- brown day dress to ward off the night’s chill. She had chosen the brown dress for its warmth when she had hoped to accompany Darcy to the field. When her husband had refused, Elizabeth had remained dressed for an impending emergency. Now, she caught up a heavy wool shawl before rushing toward the servants’ stairs. Elizabeth meant to meet their visitor and learn news of her husband. Surely, a woman would not be on the road at this hour without words of pressing importance. She burst into the kitchen just as the door opened quietly upon the room. Few servants were about at this hour, and, other than a scullery maid filling a kettle

with water at the well, no one stirred. The familiarity of the visitor’s countenance subtracted from the surprise Elizabeth might have felt otherwise. “Mrs. Ridgeway?” Elizabeth hissed. “What has brought you to Woodvine at this hour?” The woman glanced to where the door to Mrs. Holbrook’s small room was propped open with a broom. She stilled, her features, initially, proving unreadable. However, with a grimace, the housekeeper caught Elizabeth’s arm and tugged her in the direction of an alcove, which served as a stillroom. “I came to fetch you, Mrs. Darcy,” she whispered. “Why all the secrecy?” Elizabeth asked. “Mr. Stowbridge did not want the others to know what happened in Mr. Rupp’s field.” Elizabeth’s breath caught in her throat. She let out a long exhale. It was her impatience showing, but Mrs. Ridgeway appeared to ignore Elizabeth’s exigency. “You have word of my husband.” The housekeeper nodded curtly. “Is Mr. Darcy in health?” Elizabeth asked through trembling lips. Mrs. Ridgeway tugged Elizabeth along a passage to a side entrance. “I cannot say for certain,” she said seriously. “For I have not seen Mr. Darcy personally. Mr. Stowbridge thinks such matters are not in the realm of a lady’s disposition.” Elizabeth could hear the strained words, a sound of contention between the housekeeper and the woman’s new employer, but she had more pressing concerns. “Speak to me of Mr. Darcy.” She rushed to keep pace with the housekeeper. They had exited Woodvine and had set off across the well-tended lawns. Mrs. Ridgeway spoke over her shoulder at the trailing Elizabeth. “I possess only the knowledge of a second tongue in what I overheard Mr. Holbrook tell Mr. Stowbridge.” Elizabeth caught the housekeeper’s arm and dragged the woman to a halt. For a discomfiting moment, neither of them moved. “I understand,” she said with more calm than she possessed, “that Mr. Stowbridge did not confide in you. Yet, if you possess any knowledge of Mr. Darcy, I demand you speak of it immediately.” Mrs. Ridgeway’s eyes appeared distant, and Elizabeth could not read the woman’s true intentions; yet,

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she would let nothing stand between her and her husband. The lady paused for what seemed forever, but was likely only a handful of seconds. Finally, Mrs. Ridgeway said, “If you will accompany me, I shall explain what I have learned. I think it best if we speak while we walk. It will save time, and, as I am certain you will wish to reach Mr. Darcy’s side as quickly as possible, we should hurry our steps.” Elizabeth offered, “Should I have someone saddle horses or bring around a gig?” Mrs. Ridgeway tutted her disapproval. “In the time it would take to rouse one of Captain Tregonwell’s men to assist us, and then have the gentleman locate us appropriate transportation, you could be reunited with your husband. That is assuming you do not mind a walk across a country lane.” Elizabeth despised the challenging tone in the woman’s voice, but she hesitated only a moment to glance toward the house before making her decision. “Lead on, Mrs. Ridgeway,” she said with determination. The housekeeper strode toward the line of trees, and Elizabeth quickened her step to keep abreast of the woman. They entered the shadowy overhang before the woman spoke again. “This is what I overheard when Mr. Holbrook came to Stowe Hall in the early hours.” Their pace slowed when they reached the rough terrain of the wooded area. “Mr. Samuel’s groom called at the squire’s house at a little past four of the clock. He told Mr. Stowbridge a most astounding tale.” They climbed a stile and descended the other side. Mrs. Ridgeway set a diagonal path across the field. “Mr. Holbrook spoke of discovering a coven celebrating Beltane under the stars where the old monoliths are found. Do you know the area, Mrs. Darcy?” Elizabeth wished the woman would speak of Darcy’s condition, but she understood the housekeeper’s perverseness. Mrs. Ridgeway held all the high cards, and Elizabeth was a mere player. She said encouragingly, “I am familiar with Mr. Rupp’s land.” The housekeeper continued her tale and the punishing exercise. When they exited the field over a like

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stile, Elizabeth realized this was a part of the Darcy estate with which she was unfamiliar, but she brushed the thought aside as she hiked her skirt to maintain her gait. If Mrs. Ridgeway thought her a pampered lady of the ton, the housekeeper was in for a surprise. Elizabeth was not afraid of a long walk or a steady stride.

“Apparently, Mr. Barriton had taken Mrs. Jacobs prisoner and threatened to kill the woman.”

Elizabeth heard the derision in Mrs. Ridgeway’s voice. She supposed the housekeeper thought

Mrs. Jacobs deserved part of her punishment.

Elizabeth said cautiously, “Mr. Darcy and Mr.

McKye journeyed to Mr. Rupp’s land to put a stop to Mr. Barriton’s plans.”

“Well, they certainly managed to accomplish their task,” the housekeeper declared. “One of

Mr. Tregonwell’s men shot Mr. Barriton after the man shoved Mrs. Jacobs into the fire the coven had built in Mr. Rupp’s field.”

Fear skated along Elizabeth’s spine. She offered up a silent prayer that it had not been Darcy who had dispatched Mr. Barriton. She thought such an act would lie heavily on her husband’s conscience. “Was Mrs. Jacobs badly injured?”

The housekeeper led Elizabeth deeper into the woods. Elizabeth supposed this was the shortcut to Stowe Hall, which Samuel Darcy had traversed the night he died. The thought of how easily someone had overcome the trusting archaeologist sent a shiver of dread down Elizabeth’s spine.

She glanced around to learn her bearings.

“According to Mr. Holbrook, he was to seek the services of the junior surgeon Mr. Glover had once trained,” Mrs. Ridgeway shared.

“Mr. Newby.” Elizabeth provided the name.

Mrs. Ridgeway confided, “If Geoffrey Glover trained the man, Mr. Newby will serve this community well. Mr. Glover was a man of science.”

Elizabeth’s patience had worn thin. She had thought to permit Mrs. Ridgeway her moment. In some ways, she supposed she owed the housekeeper that much, for Mrs. Ridgeway’s forced exit from Woodvine had placed the woman in an untenable position. In truth, Elizabeth harbored a bit of guilt for having dismissed the woman, but she could no longer tolerate the lack of news of her husband. “Please,” she said as she came to a halt. “I beg of you; speak to me of Mr. Darcy. I cannot bear not knowing.” The housekeeper came to an abrupt standstill. She turned to Elizabeth, and with a smile of what appeared to be satisfaction, she said, “Mr. Holbrook was to fetch the surgeon to tend your husband. It appears Mr. Darcy fought with the butler. Your husband was stabbed with some sort of ceremonial knife. Mr. Holbrook says Mr. Darcy has lost a sizeable quantity of blood.” Elizabeth felt her legs buckle, and she could do little to prevent herself from sinking to her knees. Darcy had been seriously injured. While she slept at her small desk, her husband had lain in a field, possibly bleeding to death. “Dear God,” her trembling lips offered in supplication. “Do not take him from me.” She swayed in place as the darkness rushed in. “Mrs. Darcy,” the housekeeper said brusquely. “We have no time for histrionics.” Despite wishing to rock herself for comfort, Elizabeth gave herself a sound mental shake. She bit her lip to prevent the cry of anguish on the tip of her tongue. She looked up into the disapproving countenance of the housekeeper. However, Elizabeth did not apologize; instead she managed to stagger to her feet. “What else should I know?” Elizabeth asked fearfully. “Mr. Stowbridge sent word of his late return to Stowe Hall. In the message, he indicated the surgeon had seen to your husband and had advised Mr. Darcy to permit Mrs. Rupp to nurse him until a coach could be sent from Woodvine. However, Mr. Darcy insisted on returning to your side.” Elizabeth thought how like Darcy it was to recognize her concern and, therefore, place himself in danger in order to relieve Elizabeth’s anxiety. “Where is my husband now? At Stowe Hall?” “They found him on the road after he could not sit his horse. Mr. Newby is treating Mr. Darcy in a small tenants’ cottage while Mr. Holbrook escorts Mrs. Jacobs to Woodvine and returns with a wagon. Tregonwell’s men assist Mr. Stowbridge with the investigation and the prisoners.” The woman turned back to the path,

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and Elizabeth fell in step beside her. “It was thought Mr. Darcy would prove a better patient with you in attendance.” Despite the seriousness of the situation, a smile shaped Elizabeth’s lips. She could easily imagine an aristocratic Darcy barking orders to the young surgeon. That is if he were able, Elizabeth cautioned the knot lodged firmly in her chest. “Where is this cottage?” she asked in concern. “One more field to cross,” Mrs. Ridgeway said confidently. “See.” The woman pointed to where a thatched roof could be seen behind an overgrown hedgerow. Elizabeth quickened her stride. “Why in the world would they have taken shelter in such a deserted area?” The housekeeper shrugged her shoulders. “It is the way of men to make women’s lives complicated.” Elizabeth rushed across the field, which now stood fallow. Her heart pounded in her ears from the speed of their journey and from the all-encompassing fear that surrounded her. Would she be in time? Mr. Holbrook had said Mr. Darcy had lost a sizeable quantity of blood. Men did not normally worry so unless danger existed. Was Mr. Newby skilled enough to stop the bleeding? What of infection? She lifted her skirts higher and quickened her pace. Soon she was running, needing to reach Darcy before it was too late. Gasping for air, Elizabeth burst into the small cottage, nothing more than a one-room sanctuary from the cold, to discover a profound silence. Nothing moved within. Her chest heaved from her run and from the heart-stopping realization that Mrs. Ridgeway had erred somehow. She caught at the stitch of pain in her side. “Where is he? Where is my husband?” she croaked. An arm caught her across the neck while another hand placed a large damp handkerchief over her mouth and nose. From behind her, Mrs. Ridgeway’s harsh words stung her ear. “Dead. Mr. Darcy is dead.”

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